This is an appeal from a guilty plea on charges of possession of cocaine with intent to distribute and using and carrying a firearm during a drug trafficking offense. Appellant contends that the district court improperly denied his motion to suppress the cocaine and the firearm. For the reasons stated, we affirm on the cocaine count, but reverse the denial of the motion to suppress the weapon.
I
Officer Cecil Wages of the Memphis Police Department received a telephone call on February 22, 1991. The caller related that the defendant, Elson Strahan, recently had been released from jail, was staying in room 510 of the Royal Oaks Motel, and went to the Macon Road Lounge every day at about 10 a.m. and sold cocaine. The caller also stated that the defendant might have a pistol.
Wages recognized the voice as that of a frequent supplier of police information. The caller had provided information about the defendant on August 1, 1990. On that date, the caller stated that Strahan was wanted for a crime, possibly murder, and was armed. Based upon this information, Wages investigated Strahan, found that he was wanted for burglary, and then arrested him. Strahan served time in Louisiana for this offense.
Based upon the new information supplied by the caller, Wages and Sergeant Huff went to the Royal Oaks Motel. True to the caller’s report, the defendant left room 510 shortly after 10 a.m. and began driving toward the Macon Road Lounge. The officers saw the defendant park at the back of the lounge and then hurriedly leave his vehicle. The officers believed that the defendant moved hurriedly because he recognized the police vehicle, a distinctive Ford wagon with blacked-out windows, which the officers had used to arrest Strahan on the prior occasion.
Officer Huff jumped out of his car once the defendant moved toward the lounge, and apprehended Strahan outside the doorway of the lounge, approximately thirty *157 feet from defendant’s automobile. Officer Wages began patting Strahan down, fearing that he might have a weapon. Wages testified that he had this concern based upon the informant’s comments, his prior experience with the defendant, and the defendant’s alleged membership in the Bandi-tos motorcycle gang, a group whose members carry weapons. 1 Wages then felt a bulge in the defendant’s left coat pocket. The officer testified that he thought “it might have been some kind of weapon.” Wages therefore reached into the pocket and discovered cocaine, a money clip, and some money. Wages then searched the car and found a gun.
The defendant’s version of the facts differs. He claims that the officers jumped out of the car, placed him under arrest outside of the lounge, and failed to read him his Miranda rights. Strahan also stated that he did not hurry to the door of the lounge.
The defendant filed a motion to suppress both the cocaine and the gun found in the car. The magistrate judge adopted Officer Wages’s statement of the facts, and recommended that the suppression motion be denied. After a de novo hearing, the district court entered its order denying the motion to suppress. The defendant then entered into a plea agreement, pursuant to which he preserved his right to appeal the denial of the motion to suppress. The district court sentenced the defendant to twenty-seven months’ imprisonment on count one for unlawfully, knowingly, and intentionally possessing approximately five grams of cocaine with intent to distribute, in violation of 21 U.S.C. § 841(a)(1). Strahan received a consecutive sentence of sixty months on count two for using and carrying a firearm during and in relation to a drug-trafficking offense, in violation of 18 U.S.C. § 924(c). Three years of supervised release are to follow the imprisonment.
Defendant now appeals the denial of his motion to suppress both the cocaine found in his pocket and the gun located in the car. We affirm the admittance of the cocaine, but reverse the denial of the motion to suppress the gun.
II
As a preliminary matter, defendant argues that both the district judge and the magistrate judge failed to state adequately their reasons for adopting Officer Wages’s statement of the events. Strahan relies upon
United States v. Cooke,
Defendant is mistaken in arguing that Cooke necessitates a remand. The district court, after a de novo hearing, did state its reasons for crediting certain witnesses over others. Moreover, Cooke is merely hortatory in stating that “it would be helpful” if judges explained their credibility determinations. The court does not state that failure to do so mandates remand. Furthermore, the court in Cooke emphasized that its comments only applied to airport search cases. The findings of both the magistrate judge and the district judge were adequate.
III
Appellant next argues that the police actions constituted an improper stop and frisk under
Terry v. Ohio,
Similarly, in
Adams v. Williams,
Pursuant to a
Terry
stop, provided that an officer believes that a suspect may be dangerous, the officer may conduct a limited search for concealed weapons.
Adams v. Williams,
Officer Wages stated that while patting down the defendant, he felt a bulge in the left coat pocket.
3
Wages felt into the coat and uncovered cocaine, money, and a money clip. Defendant argues that even if a
Terry
stop and frisk was permissible, this search exceeded Terry’s scope. As stated in
Terry,
“A search for weapons in the absence of probable cause to arrest, however, must, like any other search, be strictly circumscribed by the exigencies which justify its initiation. Thus it must be limited to that which is necessary for the discovery of weapons which might be used to harm the officer_”
Terry,
Based upon the officer’s knowledge of the defendant and the contours of the bulge, the officer reasonably believed that the bulge could be a weapon. Part of the bulge consisted of a money clip. This clip provided rigidity to the bulge, which made it more likely that the defendant possessed a weapon.
4
The officer’s concern that the defendant possessed a weapon is further buttressed by the alarming rate of attacks upon law enforcement officers. In 1991, sixty-nine law enforcement officers were killed in the line of duty.
United States v. Clipper,
*159 IV
A separate examination is necessary of the propriety of the search of the vehicle. This search led to the discovery of the gun. The defendant contends that this weapon should be suppressed.
In
Chimel v. California,
In
United States v. White,
Because Strahan was approximately thirty feet from his vehicle when arrested, White and Belton are inapplicable. The police did not make an arrest of an occupant of a vehicle. Accordingly, the Chimel test governs. Because the passenger compartment of the vehicle was not within Strahan’s “immediate control” at the time of the arrest, the search was not incident to a lawful arrest, and suppression is proper.
United States v. Fafowora,
For the foregoing reasons, we AFFIRM the district court’s denial to suppress the cocaine. We REVERSE the district court’s denial of the motion to suppress the weapon, and REMAND for further proceedings.
Notes
. Louisiana authorities told Wages about Stra-han’s involvement with this gang.
. Defendant argues that this source was not reliable because in 1990 he mistakenly had said that defendant was wanted for murder, not robbery. This variance does not make the source unreliable.
. Wages testified as follows:
Q. Did you know what was in his pocket at that time?
A. No, ma'am.
Q. From the feel could you feel what it was?
A. No, ma’am.
Q. And what did you suspect at this time?
A. I thought it might have been some kind of weapon.
Q. Why did you suspect that?
A. Because motorcycle men sometimes carry weapons in billfolds. They could be in any shape, form or fashion.
Q. Was it based on anything else that you felt—
A. The information from the informant and the prior experience.
.The present case presents less difficulty than
United States v. Anderson,
. In Belton, the officer removed the defendant from his vehicle prior to making the search of the vehicle.
. We note that
United States of America v. Dobson,
No. 91-5978,
